The Late Imperial period in coastal Dalmatia and the inland Sava valley is a frame of slow cultural transformation and intense mobility. Archaeological excavations at Trogir-Dobrić (Split-Dalmatia County, Općina Marina) and Sisak-Pogorelec (Sisak-Moslavina County, Grad Sisak) uncover cemeteries and settlement traces that sit within the Roman provincial world between roughly 100 and 600 CE. Material culture—pottery styles, building foundations and funerary goods—shows continuity with earlier Roman practices alongside new forms that reflect changing administrative, military and economic realities of Late Antiquity.
Genetically, the seven sampled individuals provide a limited window into this dynamic landscape. Their mitochondrial lineages (H, V16, T, N, K) are broadly typical of European Mediterranean populations and suggest maternal continuity with earlier and contemporary populations across the Adriatic and central Europe. Two male individuals carry Y-DNA R—an umbrella lineage widespread in Europe—which may reflect long-standing regional ancestry or male-mediated mobility within Roman networks. Because the sample count is small (n=7), these patterns should be read as preliminary: archaeological signals of continuity and change must be integrated with larger genetic datasets and more extensive site sampling to resolve population-level processes.